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Jul 2016
2 years later

I’ve been FDM printing for years and we manufacture and sell parts using it. What we lose in “quality of finish” we gain in offering other things. IE we replace anything that breaks inside of 6 months (why not FDM parts are like 10p each!), PLA = environmentally friendly, we can also print easily in any colour and we can print 100’s of parts in a week if needed with our trusty Ultimakers!!

Something bespoke needed? Not an issue, give me a brief, a day and i’ll have something in the post as the first iteration for you tomorrow. A week later we’re printing 25 of them and delivering something
magical!!

We are experimenting with nozzle sizes and you can get fast prints with 0.8mm, finer detail with 0.2mm so if you roll your sleeves up, get the coffee on and have an understanding partner, you can get somewhere with FDM. The latest FDM machines really are great.

SLS is something I see huge benefits in. Oh how I would love to not worry about overhangs!! Nylon is super strong and the finish you get on SLS is almost perfect. Flexible stuff is easier and it would open up a whole new possibility of new parts for us.

But,… FDM is by no means dead. Don’t forget that FDM is still the goto technology for schools, home usage etc. If I were to go straight into SLS I would feel that I was lacking in so much history and experience that I have gained with FDM.

If only Ultimaker made an SLS printer, I would have one, but i’d still keep my FDM ones too.